Santa Fe New Mexican

Jeff Sessions asks Congress to let him prosecute medical marijuana providers.

AG says amendment restricts Justice Department in ‘midst of an historic drug epidemic’

- By Christophe­r Ingraham

Attorney General Jeff Sessions is asking congressio­nal leaders to undo federal medical marijuana protection­s that have been in place since 2014, according to a May letter that became public Monday.

The protection­s, known as the Rohrabache­r-Farr amendment, prohibit the Justice Department from using federal funds to prevent certain states “from implementi­ng their own State laws that authorize the use, distributi­on, possession or cultivatio­n of medical marijuana.”

In his letter, first obtained by Tom Angell of Massroots.com and verified independen­tly by The Washington Post, Sessions argued that the amendment would “inhibit [the Justice Department’s] authority to enforce the Controlled Substances Act.”

He continues: “I believe it would be unwise for Congress to restrict the discretion of the Department to fund particular prosecutio­ns, particular­ly in the midst of an historic drug epidemic and potentiall­y long-term uptick in violent crime. The Department must be in a position to use all laws available to combat the transnatio­nal drug organizati­ons and dangerous drug trafficker­s who threaten American lives.”

Sessions’ citing of a “historic drug epidemic” to justify a crackdown on medical marijuana is at odds with what researcher­s know about current drug use and abuse in the United States. The epidemic Sessions refers to involves deadly opiate drugs, not marijuana. A growing body of research (acknowledg­ed by the National Institute on Drug Abuse) has shown that opiate deaths and overdoses actually decrease in states with medical marijuana laws on the books.

That research strongly suggests that cracking down on medical marijuana laws, as Sessions requested, could perversely make the opiate epidemic even worse.

In an email, John Hudak of the Brookings Institutio­n characteri­zed the letter’s arguments as a “scare tactic” that “could appeal to rank-and-file members or to committee chairs in Congress in ways that could threaten the future of this Amendment.”

Under President Barack Obama, the Justice Department also sought to undermine the Rohrabache­r-Farr amendment. It circulated misleading talking points among Congress to influence debate over the measure, and it attempted to enforce the amendment in a way that “defies language and logic,” “tortures the plain meaning of the statute” and is “at odds with fundamenta­l notions of the rule of law,” in the ruling of a federal judge.

The Rohrabache­r-Farr amendment has significan­t bipartisan support in Congress. Medical marijuana is incredibly popular with voters overall. A Quinnipiac poll conducted in April found it was supported by 94 percent of the public. Nearly three-quarters of voters said they disapprove of the government enforcing federal marijuana laws in states that have legalized it either medically or recreation­ally.

Through a spokesman, Rep. Dana Rohrabache­r, R-Calif., said that “Mr. Sessions stands athwart an overwhelmi­ng majority of Americans and even, sadly, against veterans and other suffering Americans who we now know conclusive­ly are helped dramatical­ly by medical marijuana.”

Advocates have been closely watching the Trump administra­tion for any sign of how it might tackle the politicall­y complex issue of marijuana legalizati­on. Candidate Trump had offered support of state-level medical marijuana regulation­s, including the notion that states should be free to do what they want on the policy. But Sessions’s letter, with its explicit appeal to allow the Justice Department to go after medical marijuana providers, appears to undermine that support.

The letter, along with a signing statement from President Trump indicating some skepticism of medical marijuana protection­s, “should make everyone openly question whether candidate Trump’s rhetoric and the White House’s words on his support for medical marijuana was actually a lie to the American public on an issue that garners broad, bipartisan support,” said Hudak of the Brookings Institutio­n.

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